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Roman emperor from 253 to 260, he was taken captive by Shapur I of Persia. He was thus the first emperor to be captured as a prisoner of war.
Pater patratus, he financed the restoration of a Mithraeum in Milan.
First African emperor of Rome (193 – 211), born in Leptis Magna, now Al-Khums in Libya.
Freedman and administrator of the country estate of a certain Flavius Macedo in Moesia.
Tribune of the first cohort of Vardulli, he erected a mithraeum with his fellows in Brementium.
Emperor Caracalla ordered one of Rome’s largest temples to the god Mithras to be built in the baths bearing his name.
Freedman who dedicated the first monument mentioning a Pater.
One of the most eminent representatives of late antique pagan religiosity, combining high civic authority with deep initiation into multiple mystery traditions, including the cult of Mithras.
Pater Patrum and Senator. He was also the patriarch of the Olympian dynasty, overseeing a Mithraic community in the centre of Rome.
Syntrofus, whose Greek cognomen means companion, is part of a modest Mithraic community in Apulum.
Pater Curius Iuvenalis is attested in the first known monument dedicated by a Heliodromus.
Thrasyllus was an Egyptian of Greek descent grammarian, astrologer and a friend of the Roman emperor Tiberius.
Centurion who dedicated the first known Latin inscription to the invincible Mithras.
The cenders of Chyndonax were found on an urn with an inscription that reads High Priest of Mithras.
Founder of the Arasacid dynasty, Tiridates I was crowned king of Armenia by Nero in 66.